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Journal of Bacteriology, June 2004, p . 3991-3999, Vol . 186,
No . 12
Involvement of the SppA1 Peptidase in Acclimation to Saturating Light
Intensities in Synechocystis sp . Strain PCC 6803
E . Pojidaeva,1 V . Zinchenko,2 S . V . Shestakov,2
and A . Sokolenko1*
Department für Biologie I, Bereich Botanik, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität,
80638 Munich, Germany,1 Department of Genetics, Moscow State
University, 119899 Moscow, Russia2
Received 29 October 2003/ Accepted 24 February 2004
The sll1703 gene, encoding an Arabidopsis homologue of the
thylakoid membrane-associated SppA peptidase, was inactivated by
interposon mutagenesis in Synechocystis sp . strain PCC 6803 .
Upon acclimation from a light intensity of 50 to 150 µE m–2
s–1, the mutant preserved most of its phycobilisome
content, whereas the wild-type strain developed a bleaching phenotype
due to the loss of about 40% of its phycobiliproteins . Using in vivo
and in vitro experiments, we demonstrate that the
sppA1
strain does not undergo the cleavage of the LR33
and LCM99 linker proteins that develops in the
wild type exposed to increasing light intensities . We conclude that a
major contribution to light acclimation under a moderate light regime
in cyanobacteria originates from an SppA1-mediated cleavage of
phycobilisome linker proteins . Together with changes in gene
expression of the major phycobiliproteins, it contributes an
additional mechanism aimed at reducing the content in phycobilisome
antennae upon acclimation to a higher light intensity .
Light is the principal energy source for all photosynthetic
organisms . Pigment-protein complexes, which act as light-harvesting
antennae, transfer absorbed light to photochemical reaction centers
that convert it into chemical energy utilized by living cells .
However, despite its high physiological importance, light energy can
also become harmful for cell viability when absorbed in excess, due
to the production of radical species that, combined with molecular
oxygen, alter macromolecular structures by destroying chemical bonds .
Thus, photosynthetic organisms have evolved specific protective and
acclimative mechanisms in order to cope with unfavorable
environmental conditions . In cyanobacteria the major targets for
light access in the cell are the phycobilisome (PBS) antennae . PBS
are multimeric peripheral membrane structures that comprise pigmented
phycobiliproteins and nonpigmented linker polypeptides . In
Synechocystis sp . strain PCC 6803, the major phycobiliproteins,
allophycocyanin (APC) and phycocyanin (PC), are retained in a
multimeric structure by several types of linker proteins (23) .
The core-membrane linker, LCM subunit, is responsible for
the energy transfer from PBS to photosystem II (PSII) (12,
25); the rod-core linkers, LRC, attach the
peripheral rods to the core of PBS . In addition, rod linkers, LR,
and core linkers, LC, are involved in the assembly of rods
and core domains of PBS, respectively (35) . The
major mechanisms underlying light acclimation involve the modulation
in size and structure of the PBS, although other changes have also
been reported either in the stoichiometry or in the composition of
photochemical reaction centers (26,
27) with respect to other components of the electron transfer
chain or in the concentration of enzymes for CO2 fixation
(1) .
The synthesis, assembly, and membrane binding of PBS structures
are controlled by a variety of regulatory mechanisms, operating under
different environmental conditions . The amount and composition of PBS
are modified with light conditions and nutrient availability (2,
6, 16, 17) . Acclimation
to higher light intensity occurs primarily through changes in gene
expression (4, 18, 22)
that result in a decreased number of PBS per cell and in a shortening
of PBS rods (18, 30) . Other
well-studied examples of acclimation are the degradation of PBS
during nitrogen, phosphor, and sulfur starvations (29,
41) . Screening of cyanobacterial mutants that
retained their PBS during sulfur starvation led to the identification
of several genes that control PBS degradation in cyanobacteria (9,
34) . Among these are nblS, encoding a sensor histidine
protein kinase, and nblR, which encodes a response regulator .
These represent a two-component regulatory system controlling the
expression of a series of factors critical for the acclimation
of the photosynthetic apparatus in response to both light and
nutrient stresses (34, 39), including
nblA, which encodes a protein triggering PBS degradation under
nutrient deprivation (7, 21) .
These last two studies and others (6, 9,
21, 41) showed that changes in
the rates of PBS degradation also contribute to a cyanobacterial
response to changes in light intensity or nutrient availability .
Other studies concurred with the conclusion that peptidases also
participate in the posttranslational modification of the PBS antenna
(40, 41) . However, the identification of
proteases involved in PBS degradation or remodeling has not
been achieved, with the exception of two peptidase activities from
Anabaena that could be involved in heterocyst formation during
nitrogen limitation (11) . However, the study of an
Anabaena gene, encoding a Ca-dependent peptidase, could not
demonstrate its actual involvement in PBS degradation (24) .
The systematic inactivation of putative genes for peptidase
components in Synechocystis sp . strain PCC 6803 revealed four
enzymes that could be involved in light acclimation and one in
response to nutrient deprivation (36) . One of these
components, the SppA1 peptidase, is an integral membrane
endopeptidase that initiates the degradation of signal peptides in
bacteria (5, 28) . It was
recently identified as a thylakoid membrane-associated protein in
Arabidopsis that showed light induction at the transcriptional,
translational, and possibly posttranslational levels (20) . As
do all other bacterial organisms, cyanobacteria express two
SppA homologues, SppA1 and SppA2 (36), one of which is
described in the present study . We provide evidence for involvement
of the SppA1 peptidase in light acclimation of the PBS antenna .
Although transfer from light close to saturation for growth (50
µE m–2 s–1) to saturating light (150 µE m–2
s–1) caused similar decreases in the rate of synthesis of
PBS proteins in the wild-type and mutant strains, the latter retained
much more phycobiliprotein than the former . We show that this
difference results from a defect in cleavage of membrane and rod
linkers in the PBS structure from the mutant . These observations
support the view that light acclimation involves changes in PBS
antennae that are not exclusively due to a decreased expression of
those genes that encode PBS components . It also results from a
truncation of antenna rods by cleavage of distinct linker
polypeptides .
Strains and growth conditions. A wild-type, nonmotile
Synechocystis sp . strain, PCC 6803, was obtained from the culture
collection of the Department of Genetics at Moscow State University .
Wild-type and mutant strains were cultivated in standard BG11 medium
(32) under white low light (LL) of 50 µE m–2
s–1 at 30°C under constant agitation . For some
experiments, cell cultures were bubbled with 3% CO2 . Cell
concentrations were routinely measured by determining the optical
densities of the cultures at 750 nm (OD750) (6) .
There was no significant change in cell size between the wild type
and mutant grown under LL and medium light (ML) conditions (data not
shown) . In all instances, an OD750 of 1.0 corresponded to
1.6 x 108 cells/ml . For light
acclimation experiments, cells were grown up to an OD750
of 1.0 and then diluted with BG11 to an OD750 of 0.5 and
transferred to ML (150 µE m–2 s–1) for 3 days,
except when otherwise indicated . For nitrogen depletion experiments,
cells were grown in BG11 medium and then washed and subcultured in
nitrate-free medium . Growth media for
sppA1
and pVZsppA1-complemented strains were supplemented with 40 µg of
kanamycin/ml and 10 µg of chloramphenicol/ml, respectively .
Construction of sppA1 mutant strains. The gene encoding the
SppA1 peptidase (sll1703) was amplified from genomic DNA of
Synechocystis sp . strain PCC 6803 with primers PrF
(5'-GGTTTCGGCTGAGGCAGATC-3') and PrR (5'-GCCTTCGAGGTAAACAATGGC-3') .
The resulting PCR product of 890 bp was cloned into pGEM-TEasy
(Promega, Mannheim, Germany) . A kanamycin resistance cassette from
plasmid pUC4K (Pharmacia) was inserted into the Eco811 site of
sll1703 . This plasmid construct was used for transformation of
Synechocystis sp . strain PCC 6803 as described previously (15) .
Complete segregation was verified by PCR analysis, using primers PrF
and PrR and Southern analysis .
The sppA1 gene is a member of a gene cluster,
sll1702-sll1703-sll1704, where sll1702 and sll1703
contain four overlapping nucleotides in their termination and start
codons . Sll1704 is located downstream of sll1703 . We
ruled out any pleiotropic or polar effect of sll1703
disruption on upstream sll1702 and downstream sll1704
gene expression by performing Northern analysis of RNA transcripts
for sll1704, sll1703, and sll1702 in the wild-type and
mutant strains (experiments not shown) . Furthermore, in order to
assess the specificity of our gene-targeted inactivation, we
generated a pVZsppA1-complemented strain of the
sppA1
mutant by introducing an autonomously replicating plasmid, pVZ321,
carrying the sll1703 gene . The DNA fragment containing the
entire coding region of sll1703 was amplified by PCR with
primers PrAF (5'-GTTTGGGGATGATTTTGGGCTGG-3') and PrAR
(5'-GAAGGCAGTAGTAAATCCCGACCACA-3') and cloned into the pGEM-TEasy
vector . This fragment was excised with PvuII and recloned into the
SmaI site of a cyanobacterial autonomous replication vector, pVZ321 (43) .
The resulting plasmid, pVZsppA1, was transferred from Escherichia
coli into Synechocystis sp . strain PCC 6803 cells by
triparental mating (43) . Transconjugants were
selected on BG11-containing plates with chloramphenicol . We could
exclude the possibility of reverse recombination between a DNA
fragment containing the wild-type sequence of sll1703 in the
complementation plasmid and the
sppA1
Synechocystis genome, based on the homogeneous size of DNA
fragments amplified by PCR with external primers sll1807forw
(5'-ACCATTGGGCGGCTTGCAAAA-3') and sll1703Rfull
(5'-TTAAGGATTAAGAAAATGCCA-3'), which were designed from genome
sequences downstream and upstream from PrAF and PrAR, respectively .
Isolation of RNA and Northern analysis. RNA was extracted
from the wild type and the
sppA1
mutant grown under LL and acclimated for 36 h to ML . RNA was
extracted using a TRIZOL-based procedure (GibcoBRL Life technologies)
and ToTALLY RNA kit (Ambion, Austin, Tex.) according to the
manufacturer's instructions . For Northern blots, 15 µg of RNA was
separated by denaturing agarose gel electrophoresis and transferred
to a nylon membrane . A gene-specific probe for Northern analysis
was obtained after PCR amplification of the coding region of
sppA1 .
Isolation of thylakoid membranes and PBS. For isolation of
thylakoid membrane proteins, cyanobacterium cells were broken with
glass beads and resuspended in buffer containing 0.5 M sucrose and 50
mM HEPES-NaOH (pH 7.0) . Unbroken cells were removed by centrifugation
for 10 min at 1,600 x g .
Membrane fractions were separated from soluble fractions by
centrifugation at 45,000 x g for 20
min at 4°C . PBS were extracted according to the method of Glazer (12) .
Cells were disrupted with glass beads and solubilized with 2% Triton
X-100, and PBS were subsequently separated by sucrose density
gradient ultracentrifugation by using 0.9 M phosphate buffer (pH
7.0) . The fraction of intact PBS that formed the lower band in the
gradient was diluted in 0.9 M phosphate buffer and centrifuged
in a Beckman TL100.3 rotor at 160,000 x g,
4°C, for 5 h . The PBS pellet was dissolved in H2O and used
for in vitro analysis .
SDS-PAGE and immunological analysis. Sodium dodecyl
sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) was performed
as described previously (19) . Approximately 50 µg
of membrane proteins or 3.5 µg of chlorophyll (Chl) per lane was
resolved by 12% SDS-PAGE . For samples collected at different light
intensities, proteins were normalized with respect to their
-ATPase
subunit content, which should not be affected by changes between LL
and ML . For visualization of proteins, gels were stained with
Coomassie blue or silver . For Western analysis, proteins were
transferred onto nitrocellulose membranes (38) .
Immunodetection was performed using the enhanced chemiluminescence
system . Antisera against PBS proteins (APC, PC, and linker
polypeptides) were kindly provided by A . Grossman (Carnegie
Institution, Stanford, Calif.) .
Proteolytic assay in vitro. For testing of the "self"
proteolytic activity of isolated PBS fractions (in H2O),
the fractions were incubated in a water bath at 37°C under ML (150 µE
m–2 s–1) for 3 h . As a control, PBS were
incubated on ice in the dark . The reaction was stopped by addition of
Laemmli loading dye, and samples were analyzed with SDS-PAGE .
Pigment analysis and optical and fluorescence spectroscopy.
Chl and PC concentrations were determined as described previously (3) .
Absorption spectra of thylakoid membranes were measured at room
temperature using a UV2401 UV/VISIBLE spectrophotometer (Shimadzu
Biotech) . Low-temperature fluorescence excitation spectra (77K) were
recorded using an LS55 luminescence spectrometer (Perkin-Elmer) . Cell
suspensions were normalized at a Chl concentration of 2 µg/ml in
BG11 . After a 10-min incubation in the dark, samples were rapidly
frozen in liquid nitrogen . Excitation spectra were collected for an
emission wavelength set at 695 nm, i.e., in the PSII emission band (37) .
Protein pulse labeling. To probe protein synthesis, intact
cells were pulse labeled with L-[35S]methionine
(Amersham Biosciences, Freiburg, Germany) . Cells were grown in liquid
BG11 medium to an OD750 of 1.5 and then diluted with BG11
to a Chl concentration of 2 µg/ml (OD750 = 0.6) . Cells
were transferred to ML or kept under LL for the next 12, 24, or 36 h .
After each time point, L-[35S]methionine
was added to the medium to a final concentration of 2 µCi/ml
and cells were incubated for an additional 30 min under the chosen
light regime . Translation was arrested with chloramphenicol (150
µg/ml) . Samples were analyzed by SDS-PAGE .
Phenotypic and spectroscopic characterization of the
sppA1
mutant. We have previously reported that the
sppA1
mutant of Synechocystis displays a pattern of light
sensitivity distinct from that of the wild-type strain (36) .
Figure 1A illustrates the phenotypical differences
of the
sppA1
mutant versus the wild type and the pVZsppA1-complemented strain
grown under two light regimes, either 50 µE m–2 s–1,
hereafter referred to as LL, or 150 µE m–2 s–1,
referred to as ML . In these particular experiments, cell batches
grown under LL conditions to the end of exponential phase were
diluted to an OD750 of 0.5 and either transferred to ML or
kept under LL for another 3 days . As previously reported (34),
the transfer of wild-type cells to ML caused a bleaching phenotype
(Fig . 1A) . In marked contrast, the
sppA1
mutant showed no evidence for bleaching under ML . When the mutant
strain was complemented with the sppA1 gene, yielding the
pVZsppA1 strain (see Materials and Methods for details), the
wild-type behavior was restored, i.e., bleaching was again observed
under ML . Typical absorption spectra of wild-type cells grown under
LL and ML are shown in Fig . 1B (bold line) . The
blue region (400 to 500 nm) displays a broad absorption peak, with
several shoulders that correspond to the Soret region of the Chl a
absorption spectrum (440 nm) and to the absorption of various
carotenoid bands (above 450 nm) . The red region shows two distinct
peaks, one centered on 620 nm due to phycobilin-containing proteins,
PC and APC, the other around 680 nm corresponding to Chl a .
Consistent with the bleaching of the wild-type cultures in ML, their
absorption spectrum changed from LL to ML with a significant decrease
of both the Chl a and PC/APC absorption bands relative to that
of the carotenoids (as can be seen in Fig . 1B, middle
panel, by the higher contribution to the overall spectrum of the
shoulder at 480 nm) . However, the decrease in PC/APC was more
pronounced than that of Chl a, leading to a marked change in
the ratio of the two absorption peaks in the red region of the
spectrum . The absorbance spectrum of the
sppA1
mutant was similar to that of the wild type under LL but became
markedly different from that of the wild type under ML (Fig.
1B, middle panel) . Although a decrease in Chl a
absorption relative to that of carotenoids was also observed, the
PC/APC absorption peak at 620 nm remained higher for the
sppA1
mutant . Consequently, the ratio between the Chl a and PC/APC
absorption peaks in the mutant cells under ML remained similar to
that under LL . These observations suggest that the wild type adapts
to ML by losing more of its PC/APC-containing phycobiliproteins than
does the
sppA1
mutant . The loss of phycobiliproteins in the wild type of
Synechocystis is well documented in another instance, when cells
are deprived of nitrogen sources . To check whether SppA1 inactivation
also resulted in the preservation of PBS under nitrogen starvation,
the wild type and the
sppA1
mutant were grown in nitrogen-depleted medium and the loss of
PBS was visualized by the loss of the PC/APC absorbance peak in the
620-nm region of the spectrum (Fig . 1B, right panel) .
The same decrease in the PC/APC absorbance was observed with
the two strains, showing that SppA1 plays no part in the loss of PBS
under nitrogen starvation conditions .
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FIG . 1 . Growth phenotype (A) and absorbance spectra (B) of the wild type
(WT) and the
sppA1
mutant during acclimation to the ML regime and nitrogen deprivation .
Synechocystis cultures were grown under LL to an OD750 of
1.0 . Cells were then transferred to ML or kept at LL for the next 3
days . For nitrogen limitations, cells were grown in BG11 medium and then
transferred to nitrogen-free BG11 (-N) medium for 3 days as described in
Materials and Methods . The spectra were measured on whole cyanobacterial
cells . Bold line, wild type; dashed line,
sppA1
mutant.
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Figure 2 shows the growth rates and changes in pigment content
during acclimation of the wild-type and mutant strains to ML
for 72 h . The mutant grew faster than the wild type under ML and
reached a higher cell density after 3 days of growth (Fig .
2A) . The changes in pigment content are given on a per-cell
basis (see Materials and Methods for relations between cell
number and OD750) relative to the initial concentration measured
before acclimation (Fig . 2B and C) . There was a parallel
decrease in Chl content in the two strains over 3 days of growth in
ML, whereas the PC content decreased twice as much in the wild type
as in the
sppA1
mutant . Taken together, the higher cell density and higher PC content
explain the darker color of the mutant culture grown for 3 days in
ML . Table 1 shows the generation time of the two
strains at three light intensities, 20 µE m–2 s–1
(dim light), 50 µE m–2 s–1 (LL), and 150 µE m–2
s–1 (ML) . Cell division was observed to be light limited
in the 20- to 50-µE m–2 s–1 range . This intensity was
close to saturation, since a further increase in light intensity by a
factor of 3 produced only a moderate increase in growth rates for the
two strains . That these growth conditions were not limited by CO2
availability is demonstrated by the similar generation times observed
whether cultures were or were not bubbled with 3% CO2 .
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FIG . 2 . Cell growth and pigment analysis of the wild type and the
sppA1
mutant strain under the ML regime . (A) Synechocystis cells were
grown first under LL till exponential phase, diluted with BG11 medium,
and transferred to ML for 72 h . The cell growth (A) and Chl (B) and PC
(C) concentrations were measured as percentages per OD750 .
Bold line, wild type; dashed line,
sppA1
mutant.
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TABLE 1 . Doubling time of the wild type and the
sppA1
mutant strain of Synechocystis sp . strain PCC 6083 at different
light intensitiesa
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In an attempt to correlate the changes in pigment content and
absorption properties with changes in the functional organization of
the antennae, we determined 77K excitation spectra of the 695-nm
emission peak that originates from PSII cores (13), using
cyanobacterial cells adapted for 36 h to either LL or ML conditions .
As shown in Fig . 3A, the wild-type excitation spectrum
of PSII emission from cells grown under LL displayed a small
excitation component in the blue region that corresponds to Chl a
from the PSII cores and a major 624-nm component that corresponds
to PBS antennae functionally connected to the Chl a-containing
PSII cores . These features are seen as well in the
sppA1
strain grown under LL . The wild type grown under ML showed a marked
decrease in the contribution of PBS sensitization relative to
Chl sensitization of the PSII emission (Fig . 3B) that was not
observed with the
sppA1
mutant grown under ML . Taken together, the absorbance and 77K
fluorescence data show that light acclimation, viewed as a decreased
PBS-to-Chl ratio in thylakoid membranes of the wild type grown under
ML, is prevented in the absence of SppA1 .
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FIG . 3 . 77K excitation spectra of the wild type and the
sppA1
strain with LL and ML regimes . Synechocystis cells of the wild
type and the
sppA1
mutant were grown in LL and adapted to ML for 36 h . The excitation
spectra were recorded for PSII emission at 695 nm . Bold line, wild type;
dashed line,
sppA1
mutant.
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Characterization of supramolecular photosynthetic assemblies.
The changes in intracellular pigment content in the wild type and the
sppA1
mutant under various light regimes could reflect changes in the
amount of thylakoid membranes per cell or changes in the relative
content of pigment-binding protein per thylakoid membrane or both .
Thylakoid membrane proteins were therefore isolated from wild-type
and mutant strains after growth for 3 days with LL or ML, and their
protein patterns were compared after SDS-PAGE (data not shown) and
immunological analysis (Fig . 4) . Thylakoid proteins
were immunodetected with antisera raised against the ß subunit of the
ATP synthase, the PsaA/B proteins of the PSI reaction center, the D1
protein of PSII, the Rieske FeS protein of the cytochrome b/f
complex, and major PBS rod proteins (Fig . 4, PC) .
No significant differences in the content of ATP synthase and that of
the cytochrome b/f complex were observed with various light
regimes between the two strains . In contrast, the content in Chl a-containing
reaction center proteins of PSI and PSII decreased with exposure to
higher light intensities . However, no differences in the relative
contents of these protein complexes were detected between the
sppA1
mutant and the wild type . In contrast, the content in
phycobiliproteins in thylakoid membranes (Fig . 4)
and whole-cell extracts (Fig . 5) was markedly
different between the wild type and the
sppA1
mutant when grown under ML . The amount of PC decreased extensively
with increasing light regimes in the wild type (Fig . 4),
whereas the
sppA1
mutant retained most of its PC/APC content under ML . The preservation
of most of the antenna proteins in the mutant strain under the ML
regime is consistent with the spectral data . Thus, we conclude that
the
sppA1
mutant is mainly altered in the acclimation of PBS structures to an
increase in light intensity .
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FIG . 4 . Biochemical analysis of major photosynthetic complexes .
Thylakoid membrane proteins isolated from cyanobacterial cells adapted
for 3 days to LL and ML were separated by 12% PAGE . The major
photosynthetic proteins were visualized by immunodetection with antisera
raised against the ß subunit of ATP synthase, PsaA/B reaction center
proteins of PSI, the D1 protein of PSII, the Rieske FeS protein of
cytochrome b/f complex, and major bilin-containing proteins of
PBS antennae . The proteins were normalized to the content in the ß
subunit of ATP synthase . WT, wild type.
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FIG . 5 . Evolution of whole-cell content in PC
in vivo . Wild-type (WT) and
sppA1
strains were grown in LL till mid-log phase and then diluted with BG11
to an OD750 of 0.5 (point 0) and transferred to ML or kept in
LL for 36 h . Cells were taken after 12, 24, or 36 h in ML and after 36 h
in LL . Total proteins were extracted from cells at the same OD750
and separated by 12% SDS-PAGE . Proteins were visualized by Coomassie
blue staining . Coomassie-stained cell proteins from the wild type (A)
and visualization of PC
and PCß bands during acclimation to ML (B) are shown . The
upper part of the panel with
-
and ß-ATPase subunits was used as a loading control.
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Figure 5 shows a kinetic analysis of the changes in cellular
content in phycobiliproteins for the wild type and the
sppA1
strain grown under ML over a 36-h time period . The whole-protein
content from cell cultures acclimated to ML after 12, 24, or 36
h was separated on a 12% SDS-polyacrylamide gel and stained with
Coomassie blue . The prominent 16-kDa band in this gel corresponds to
PC ,
with a faint APC
band migrating immediately below PC
(Fig . 5A) . We focused on the changes in these bands upon
light acclimation (Fig . 5B) . As a loading control,
the content in
and ß subunits of ATP synthase is also presented . The comigration of
these proteins with Coomassie-stained bands was tested
immunologically by using anti-
and -ß ATP synthase antibodies . No significant changes were detected
in the wild type during the first 12 h of acclimation to ML . The
decrease in total cell content in PC became visible only after
24 h and further extended up to 36 h, a time period that corresponds
to the bleaching phenotype readily visible by the mere observation of
the cultures . In contrast,
sppA1
cells retained most of the PC subunits after 36 h of exposure to ML .
These data proved that the loss of phycobiliproteins under higher
light regimes is a delayed and slow process in cyanobacterial cells
that requires about 24 h before it can be detected .
It has been previously proposed that the decrease in the size of
the PBS which occurs with increasing light intensity was partially
due to a down-regulation of the genes coding for the major
phycobiliproteins (4, 18) . Therefore, we
wondered whether the difference in PC/APC content between the
sppA1
mutant and the wild type could be attributed to a lack of
down-regulation in PC/APC gene expression in the mutant grown under
ML . The rates of synthesis of the major bilin-containing proteins
were monitored by a pulse-labeling study using L-[35S]methionine
under LL and ML conditions (Fig . 6; for details, see
Materials and Methods) . Most importantly, the wild-type and
sppA1
strains displayed the same behavior with respect to changes in light
regimes: as previously reported (18, 22),
there was a drop in the rate of synthesis of the major PC and APC
polypeptides under ML versus LL for the two strains . This change
occurred within the first 12 h of transfer to ML conditions, with no
further decrease over the next 36 h of acclimation . These data
account for the decreased content in PC that remains in the
sppA1
mutant (Fig . 2) . They led us to exclude that the
larger decrease in phycobiliproteins in the wild type when placed
under ML conditions is due to a mere translational regulation: the
sppA1
mutant undergoes a similar down-regulation of translation, although
it preserves a higher phycobiliprotein content under ML .
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FIG . 6 . Analysis of protein translation rate in the
sppA1
mutant and the wild type under various light regimes by pulse labeling
with L-[35S]methionine . Cells were
adapted to LL and ML for 12, 24, or 36 h . Cells were labeled with
L-[35S]methionine as described in
Materials and Methods, after immediate transfer to various light regimes
for 30 min (lane 0.5) and after each time point of incubation under ML .
The whole-cell proteins were separated by 12% SDS-PAGE, and the gel was
fluorographed in a Fuji phosphorimager.
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SppA controls a light-dependent cleavage of rod linkers. The
amount of linker proteins in PBS bound to the thylakoid membranes in
the wild type and mutant adapted to various light conditions for 3
days was then analyzed by an immunological assay (Fig .
7A) . The amount of LR35 was stable in the wild type
under two light conditions, while those of LCM99 and
LR33 strongly decreased upon acclimation to ML .
In marked contrast, these two linker proteins remained stable in the
mutant strain under ML . These observations are consistent with the
loss of membrane-bound APC and PC observed in the wild type but not
in the
sppA1
mutant and reflect an SppA1-driven loss in phycobiliproteins in
Synechocystis during light acclimation to ML intensities .
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FIG . 7 . Degradation of linker polypeptides of PBS antennae . (A)
Wild-type and
sppA1
mutant cells were grown under LL and then transferred to the ML regime
for the next 72 h . Thylakoid membrane proteins were separated,
transferred onto nitrocellulose membranes, and immunodetected with
antisera against the various linker proteins: membrane linker LCM99
and rod linkers LR35 and LR33 .
Protein loading was normalized to the ß-ATPase subunit as shown in Fig.
4 . (B) Gene expression of sppA1 under LL and
ML . RNA was extracted from the wild-type and mutant strains grown under
LL and then acclimated to ML for 36 h . SppA1 transcripts were identified
by hybridization analysis with a gene-specific probe . (C) PBS were
isolated from wild-type, pVZsppA1-complemented, and
sppA1
cells grown in LL . Isolated PBS were incubated at 4°C in the dark (lanes
1, 3, and 5) and at 37°C under ML (lanes 2, 4, and 6) for 3 h . The
reaction was stopped by placing the samples on ice . Proteins were
separated by 12% SDS-PAGE . For protein visualization, the gel was silver
stained.
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The fact that SppA1 controls acclimation of antennae to increased
light intensity could be due to a light-dependent expression of the
sppA1 gene . This prompted us to probe the transcript pattern
for sppA1 in wild-type cells grown under LL before being
acclimated (or not) for 36 h to ML (Fig . 7B) . We found that
the sppA1 transcript was equally expressed under LL and ML regimes .
These data indicated that SppA1, if light regulated, is controlled
at a (post)translational level .
Early studies with isolated PBS have mentioned that they were
subjected to rapid degradation in vitro (33) . In an attempt
to link these early observations with the present findings, PBS
from the wild-type, pVZsppA1-complemented, and
sppA1
cells adapted to LL conditions were isolated and subsequently
incubated at 4°C in the dark and at 37°C for 3 h under ML conditions
(Fig . 7C) . A degradation of the membrane (LCM99)
and rod (LR33) linkers was observed exclusively
with PBS preparations from the wild-type and pVZsppA1 strains . LCM99
and LR33 linker proteins were stable in the
sppA1
mutant . This experiment demonstrates that at least two types of
linker peptides, LCM99 and LR33,
are degraded in isolated PBS fractions . In addition, it shows
that PBS isolated from the
sppA1
mutant lack the peptidase activity responsible for linker degradation
in the wild type . Taken together, the in vitro and in vivo
experimental data demonstrate the proteolytic resistance of two major
PBS linker polypeptides, LCM99 and LR33,
in the absence of the SppA1 peptidase .
Under our experimental conditions, the wild-type strain of Synechocystis
has a doubling time of about 11 h when grown at a light intensity
of 50 µE m–2 s–1 under white light . This light
intensity is close to saturation, since a switch to 150 µE m–2
s–1 produces only a modest decrease in generation time, by
about 10% . This generation time is not limited by CO2
availability, since bubbling CO2 in the culture does not change
the rate of cell division under LL and ML regimes . However,
this transition from close-to-saturating light to saturating light
was accompanied by a marked bleaching of the cultures that became
visible after 24 h of exposure to the new light regime and slowly
developed over the next 48 h . This delay in bleaching was observed
for initial cell OD750s of either 0.1 or 0.5 as well as in
culture conditions that were kept at constant cell density by a daily
dilution up to an OD750 of 1.0 . The 40% decrease in
phycobilins and Chl after 3 days under 150 µE m–2 s–1
was accounted for by the loss of a significant proportion of the PC
and APC phycobiliproteins and of the PSI and PSII Chl-binding
proteins . The former change reflects an acclimation of
Synechocystis to increasing light intensities that has been
previously attributed to changes in the expression of genes encoding
phycobiliproteins (4, 8) .
The
sppA1
mutant grows at rates similar to those for the wild type—even a
little faster—under the various conditions used in this study . In
that respect it is similar to other genetically modified
cyanobacterial strains that were previously reported to have higher
growth rates than wild-type strains (10, 21) .
When cultures of the
sppA1
mutant were exposed to a 50/150-µE m–2 s–1
light transition, we observed the same changes in Chl and photosystem
contents and the same drop in synthesis of the major
phycobiliproteins as in the wild type . However, the mere comparison
of the cultures showed that the pronounced bleaching observed with
the wild type was no longer seen with the mutant . Although a minor
part of this difference can be ascribed to the higher pigment/cell
content and higher cell density reached by the mutant cultures, the
major contribution came from the better preservation of
phycobiliproteins in
sppA1
grown at 150 µE m–2 s–1 . The higher content
in peripheral antenna in the mutant was documented both at the
protein level, relative to other photosynthetic proteins, and by a
higher PBS sensitization of PSII fluorescence emission at 77K .
Because the two strains showed a similar down-regulation of PBS
expression at 150 µE m–2 s–1, we are bound to
conclude that the greater loss of phycobiliproteins in the wild type
is due to a degradation process that is hampered in the
sppA1
mutant .
The participation of SppA1 in the degradation of phycobiliproteins
when reaching light intensities immediately above saturation is
specific to this acclimation process . The loss in phycobiliproteins
and PBS due to other changes in environmental conditions, such as
nitrogen deprivation (this study) or deprivation in S, P, Fe, and Cu
(36), remained unaltered in the
sppA1
mutant . PBS degradation responses are thus controlled by different
proteases depending on the environmental stimulus . They differ in
both amplitude and kinetics, with nitrogen depletion leading to a
rather rapid decrease of up to 90% of PBS (21), while
the drop in intracellular phycobiliproteins reported here, upon
acclimation to saturating light, is a delayed process and does not
exceed 40% . During nitrogen deprivation, cell division and synthesis
of phycobiliproteins stop, while preexisting phycobiliproteins
are degraded . Therefore, there is a net loss in phycobiliproteins .
During light acclimation, the synthesis of new phycobiliproteins is
decreased, and the content in preexisting phycobiliproteins also
declines due to a limited and specific degradation process . However,
since the cell cultures continue to grow, there still is a relative
increase in phycobiliproteins per unit volume although the content
per cell decreases . We note that the degradation of LHCII antenna
upon acclimation of higher plants to high light conditions is also a
slow process, with 30% degradation only, observed after 3 days of
acclimation to high light intensities (42) .
It was previously demonstrated (31, 33)
that linker proteins could be degraded in vitro within isolated PBS
by some coisolated proteolytic enzyme(s) . Here we confirmed this
observation: there was a selective loss of LR33
and LCM99 linker proteins in PBS isolated from
the wild type when incubated at 37°C for 3 h . However, this linker
degradation was no longer observed when using PBS isolated from
sppA1 .
This points to an acclimation process with saturating light regimes
that is caused by a linker-targeted and SppA1-mediated degradation
process . That linker proteins were degraded in vitro under ML,
whereas they remained stable in the dark, demonstrated that the
protease can be activated by light, most likely by some
conformational change . Indeed, at variance with the SppA1 homologue
from Arabidopsis, which is light induced at the
transcriptional level (20), we found that sppA1
from Synechocystis is constitutively transcribed . Therefore,
the light-dependent regulation of SppA1 proteolytic activity should
rather involve some posttranslational modifications of the protease
or/and some conformational changes of its protein substrates . We note
that an extensive degradation of rod linker LR33,
but not of the membrane linker, was also reported during nitrogen
starvation (21), a process that does not require SppA1 .
This means that PBS may undergo similar modifications of their
structure during degradation through different regulatory mechanisms .
Proteolysis of PBS encompasses a diversity of phenomena from
extensive degradation of all PBS subunits, as observed during
nitrogen starvation, to some limited modifications in their
supramolecular structure due to the selective action of endopeptidases .
Our in vitro experiments suggest that such a fine regulation in
antenna organization should start with the cleavage of the distal
linker protein LR33 and the membrane linker LCM99 .
Decreased energy transfer from PBS to PSII at saturating light
intensities can occur through shortening of the PBS rods via a
detachment of the external rod segments or of the whole rods from PBS
cores and/or through a decreased ratio of PBS to PSII per
photosynthetic membrane due to their detachment from the membrane,
leading ultimately to their degradation in the cytoplasm . Degradation
of LR33 and LCM99 can account
for both a shortening and a release of PBS from the membranes . The
former process should be driven by the loss of LR33-PC,
which represents the distal chains of the rods . We have shown that
this loss is controlled by SppA1, an observation which is consistent
with previous reports showing that the regulation of LR33
accumulation is not primarily due to transcriptional changes but
rather is due to a control at the translational or posttranslational
level (8) . The release of PBS from the membranes
probably involves the other linker, LCM, which
participates in assembling the PBS structure in an energy
transfer-competent position towards PSII (12,
25) . LCM linker represents a chimeric protein with a
heterogeneous domain structure . The C-terminal part of this protein
contains three repeat domains (REP1-3) which show high homology to
conserved domains of the rod and rod-core linker polypeptides and
provides the binding domains that interact with the APC trimer .
Sequencing of a 23-kDa peptide that was associated with an APC ( APßAP)
subcomplex showed that it originated from the C-terminal part
of this membrane linker (14), which carried only the last REP
domain . This crucial experiment demonstrates that there is a
peptidase able to cleave the C-terminal sequence of the LCM
linker, which is tightly interacting with APC . Since there are
two copies of LCM per PBS structure, each APC trimeric cylinder
could potentially be detached, leading to a complete dissociation
of PBS from the thylakoid membrane . Thus, one would expect that
degradation of LCM should lead to a decrease in the whole-cell
content in assembled PBS, an observation which was indeed reported
for some cyanobacteria during light acclimation (30) .
PBS linker proteins were protected from degradation in the
sppA1
strain under ML . This is in favor of SppA1 being the peptidase
coisolated with PBS that cleaves the linkers . However, we cannot
exclude an indirect role of SppA . For instance, it could control the
susceptibility of the PBS structure to another peptidase or regulate
the expression of this PBS-targeted peptidase . The study of other
intracellular targets for SppA1 should provide a better view of the
regulatory function of thylakoid-bound peptidases in cyanobacteria .
The work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft Grant
DFG to A.S . and E.P . (DFG SO448/2), the Russian Foundation for Basic
Research (01-04-48081) to V.Z., and the Russian Program of Leading
Scientific Institutions to S.V.S . and V.Z .
We are grateful to A . Grossman for the kind gift of antisera
against phycobiliproteins . We thank V . M . Glaser for technical help
in the preparation of the mutant strains . We also thank R . Bassi,
F.-A . Wollman, and R . G . Herrmann for critical reading and discussion
of the manuscript .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Department für
Biologie I, Bereich Botanik, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Menzingerstr . 67,
80638 München, Germany . Phone: 49-89-17861242 . Fax: 49-89-1782274 . E-mail:
Anna.Sokolenko@lrz.uni-muenchen.de .
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